I'll put up with a lot of things primarily because a lot of things
simply aren't any of my business. Do I approve of those things?
Maybe. Perhaps I even engage in or support those things myself. Do I
condemn those things? Possibly. But if you're not infringing on the
rights of others, I believe that you have every right to go right on
ahead and do even those things of which I disapprove. But there's
one thing I won't tolerate, and that one thing is hypocrisy.

Hypocrisy is, it seems, running rampant these days. We have parents
who demand that schools do a better job teaching their children. But
when their child is in trouble for being disruptive, or when their
son or daughter brings home a failing grade, those same parents
demand that the grades be changed or the punishment be suspended.
Supposedly devoutly religious people spend a good deal more of their
time passing judgment on others than they do on removing the mote
from their own eye. Politicians make laws they don't enforce, or
make unconscionably unconstitutional laws they intend to enforce to
their last breath.

The vast majority of Americans as well as their political
representatives think that illegal immigration is a crime. Our
current laws call it a crime. But because there are so many people
breaking the law, some politicians think that we should just permit
those illegal aliens already in the country a "Get Out of Jail Free"
card called the "Guest Worker" program. Politicians have rushed to
assure the public that no one will get guest worker status without a
background check to ensure against a criminal history. But the very
fact that someone is inside US borders illegally makes them a
criminal already! Yet Congress continues to consider the program
(albeit contentiously), and California and Florida are both thinking
about allowing illegal aliens to get legal driver's licenses (the
fact that a legal ID is often all that's needed for someone to
obtain government services merely adds insult to injury for the
law-abiding American taxpayer). Meanwhile, those same liberal
Americans suggesting that amnesty makes sense are the very people
complaining bitterly that jobs with decent wages are scarce because
foreigners are willing to work for less.

Many on the religious right  or frankly, even the religious middle
 are arguing today that we need a Constitutional Amendment
prohibiting same-sex marriages, and that the Ten Commandments be
displayed in courtrooms. It is this same group that insists churches
remain tax exempt and which urges that zoning laws don't apply to
churches because of the First Amendment's implied separation of
church and state. These are the people who "pooh pooh" any
complaints about school prayer with accusations the schools are
denying their god, but who paint signs and march in protests at high
schools that include Wiccan or old Aztec in their religious studies
courses. Either people want the government and the courts involved
in specific religious issues, and to be even-handed about it, or
they don't. Which is it?

When the McCain-Feingold version of campaign finance reform was
passed, groups ranging across the political spectrum maintained the
law was an infringement of free speech. Congress insisted that it
wasn't, and the government defended the issue on appeal. Part of the
defense consisted of claims that campaign finance reform was
necessary (it most certainly was), and that this law would prove a
method for that reform. But already, in the first presidential
election since the law's implementation, we're learning that the
Democrat candidate has found loopholes in the regulations, and
there's no reason to think Republicans won't use it or another one
shamelessly as well. Meanwhile, legitimate advocacy groups remain
stifled under the law. (Want an even more specific example of
hypocrisy in politics and where just one man is concerned? When he
ran for the presidency, George W. Bush said he wouldn't sign such a
bill as McCain-Feingold. Guess whose signature made it law?)

The Freedom Movement is  alas!  not exempt from its own brand of
hypocrisy. But because I hold its representatives to a higher
standard than the average political wonk (which, to be fair, isn't
really saying all that much), I am most disappointed when this group
exhibits its own version of "do as I say, not as I do." The case in
point is some of the latest meanderings of the Free State Project on
its way to taking up residence in New Hampshire.

On its own web site [www.freestateproject.org/],
the Free State Project says that it is "an effort to recruit 20,000
liberty-loving people to move to New Hampshire," and that it is
"looking for neighborly, productive, tolerant folks from all walks
of life, of all ages, creeds, and colors..." Yet some members of the
group, including the group's leadership, have been openly  and
very strongly  critical of similar efforts focusing on a western
locale. While Boston T. Party's Free State Wyoming
[www.javelinpress.com/free_state_wyoming.html]
says it wishes all similar projects well (there is also a Free West Alliance
[www.freewest.org/] from which, for the
record, I've also heard nothing truly negative), the Free State Project has been
unkind at best concerning other projects. Some members have also
openly  and acidly  criticized Boston personally.
Reading further on the Free State Project web site, we learn that it
believes "that government exists at most to protect people's rights,
and should neither provide for people nor punish them for activities
that interfere with no one else." Yet the leadership of the project
has decided (against the advice of several board members) to seek
501(c)3 status. Due to the many regulations involved in such a
status and the inherent violation of privacy of members accordingly
 not to mention the hypocrisy of signing up for a big-government
program  I personally condemned the notion. The application
process continues, however, to move forward. Why? Because, I was
told, since 501(c)3 exists, the group should take advantage of it.
By that argument, since food stamps exist, we should take advantage
of it (ironically, a downturn in food stamp program participants saw
the government actually advertising the availability of assistance,
which just goes to prove that government programs are quite a bit
harder to get rid of than they are to establish). Since Medicaid
exists, we should stop paying our health insurance premiums. Because
there are government law enforcement agencies, we should turn in our
firearms. And so on. As long as people take advantage of various
government hand-outs, there will be those who will fight to keep
those hand-outs for themselves, and those in government who will
fight to keep them for their jobs. If the Free State Project really
means what it says, it should be refusing any government aid or
regulation no matter the temporary inconvenience or added expense.

The Free State Project and its companion efforts (note that I do not
call them competitors because, in reality, they're not  they
appeal to a very different mindset than does the intellectual and
east-centered Free Sate Project) are mostly a numbers game. Those
who participate are wagering that enough people condensed in certain
locales can influence the political process by voting, campaigning,
speaking out, and running for office. New Hampshire, Wyoming,
Montana, and Idaho all have their fans, and each has some reasonable
statistical information to bolster their own claims.

But even more than a numbers game, the freedom movement in toto must
not only "talk the talk" but also "walk the walk." It's the example
they set that will be truly inspiring, not numbers on a spreadsheet.
Real liberty and small government are worthy goals that should tempt
many to relocate. Unfortunately, when one group takes advantage of
the type of government program it claims it will work to phase out,
and when one group that brags of its tolerance has members sniping
at others, it not only lessens its own chances for success but makes
all of the others look bad, even by the loosest association.

I continue to support in the strongest possible terms the
motivations of all of the free wherever projects. But one of the
groups is now clearly lagging in setting a good example of just what
it is all three groups say they're trying to do. While I'm honest
enough in my libertarian mindset to say that the Free State Project
is free to say and do as it pleases, I'm still personally
disappointed that the group I've long supported has done some of the
things it has. Once it became obvious that such was the case, I had
to say something. It would have been hypocritical to do any less.